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El. knyga: Cold of May Day Monday: An Approach to Irish Literary History

(Formerly Research Professor, University of Ulster)
  • Formatas: 316 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-May-2014
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191510458
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 316 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-May-2014
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191510458
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The Cold of May Day Monday offers an indvidual view of the history of Irish literature from its very earliest phases up to the present day, more or less, with discussions of major writers such as Friel, Heaney, Derek Mahon, McGahern, and John Banville. Robert Welch traces the roots of Irish literature in myth and legend and explores ancient and pre-Celtic deposits and remembrances; saga literature, as well as devotional writing; the bardic heritage and the cycles of tales of early Ireland; the importance and survival of folklore; and the later phases of Irish literature, from the seventeenth century onwards. Welch frames his study around themes and clusters rather than chronology, seeking to retain coherence by means of a sustained attention to the thematic strains. Substantial attention is paid to the figure of the Hag in Irish literary culture. The often deeply troubled relations between Ireland and England inevitably call for treatment as well, most notably in chapters examining the Great Famine and its consequences for literature and cultural expression. Yeats is one of the key figures, as are O'Casey and Synge, but the focus is on their literary output, not their political experiences (though these are not overlooked).Robert Welch offers a readable account of one of a fascinating literary history, providing insights into the connections between Irish legend and literature, and accounts of the some of the best Irish writers of the twentieth century.

Recenzijos

Robert Welchs final book, written before his death in 2013, is a marvellous primer on Irish literary history... This book is an education, not just in literary history but in the psychology of the island ... It is radiant with enthusiasm; it is written with great psychological acuity; and it has the kind of narrative zest that means that it is best read whole... It should certainly be required reading for those who teach Irish literature. It gives a survey broad enough to provide a satisfying map of Irish literary history and detailed enough to provide something new about each text that is examined. It could only have been written after a lifetimes reading, thinking and feeling. * Adam Hanna, University College Cork, Irish Economic and Social History * The Cold of May Day Monday flows boldly through the troubled stream of Irish literature. A major achievement of scholarship and narrative, it is that rare book that hears wild laughter in the archives of a troubled island. * Irish Times, Nicholas Allen * Nobody has written about Irish literature with a more immediate sense of its value and the human values and passions it comes out of than Welch. * Eilean Ni Chuilleanain, Cyphers *

Introduction 1(4)
1 Ancient Things
5(13)
2 Iron Age Martial Arts and Christian Scribes
18(10)
3 Reciting from the Finger-Ends: The Bards and Ossian
28(11)
4 The Undoing of Ireland: Conquest and Reconquest
39(15)
5 Ireland: A Colony?
54(15)
6 Romantic Ireland?
69(19)
7 The Folk Tradition
88(16)
8 Famine
104(16)
9 New Departures
120(14)
10 The West's Awake
134(18)
11 Hearts of Stone
152(15)
12 Matrix of Surds
167(50)
13 Astrakhan Ataraxie
217(75)
14 Coda: By the Bog of Cats
292(3)
15 Conclusion
295(3)
Bibliographical Notes 298(8)
A Bibliography of Literary Histories and Related Works 306(3)
A Note on the Author 309(2)
Index 311
Robert Anthony Welch (1947-2013) was born in Cork and was a scholarship student at the University there. He went on to Leeds where he worked under the Yeatsian, A.N. Jeffares and then became a Lecturer. In 1984 he became Professor of English and Head of Department at University of Ulster and later became Dean. He was Research Professor at the University of Ulster until his death in 2013.